The Art of Churchill

One Sir Winston Churchill stands tall and proud in front of dozens of his books; another Winston Churchill reminisces about that time he fled the Boer prisons.

This is how artworks of MA Illustration graduate Carl Hoare, and final year BA Fashion student Stefanie Tschirky, highlighted the famous politician’s life and personality.

Their creations qualified them to be amongst eight candidates for the 2013 Pentland Winston Churchill Design Award.

Carl Hoare, 32, who graduated from Kingston University in 2011, won second place in the competition.

“I knew I wanted to tell the story. I wanted him to be thinking about the incident,” he said. “I wasn’t sure if he was going to be dreaming, or if he was going to be awake remembering it.”

The competition invited UK students and graduates to create an inspiring piece of artwork that captured the spirit of Churchill and encapsulated his relevance to the contemporary scene in the UK today.

Students were able to portray their 2D work through graphic design, textile, painting or any other artistic medium.

A man to remember

Hoare’s piece, The Extraordinary Tale of Young Sir Winston, depicts Churchill when he was in South Africa during the Boer War in 1899.

Hoare simplified the famous phase in the statesman’s life, where he was captured by Boer forces and taken to prison.

Organisers of the competition, the Pentland Group, were so impressed with Hoare’s work that they decided to offer him a paid internship in February.